• @arandomthought
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    13810 days ago

    Tell me you work in the US without telling me you work in the US.

    • @[email protected]
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      -2810 days ago

      Not calling you out specifically, but I see this phrase everywhere and don’t understand its popularity. It would be more concise and equally “clever” to just say “Sounds like this guy works in the US”. What is the appeal that everyone keeps typing this?

      • @arandomthought
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        4710 days ago

        AFAIK it’s been a challenge some people did on… twitter I think?
        Basically it’s “Tell me you’re XYZ without telling me you’re XYZ” and people responded with funny answers.
        At some point that got turned around and people satrted to use that sencence structure to indicate that the thing they are commenting on would have been a great answer for that challenge.

        • @[email protected]
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          810 days ago

          Thanks yeah, I’ve seen that sort of thread. If anything in this particular case it would make more sense if the comment was “tell me what country you’re from without telling me what country you’re from.”

        • @[email protected]
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          810 days ago

          Lol, well I didn’t mean specifically “tell me you’re from the US” just the general phrase “tell me X without telling me X”.

          And can confirm that plenty of Americans aren’t thrilled with how things are run in America. We’re running democracy v0.1 beta

          • Bob
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            29 days ago

            Someone said it on Twitter once so I suppose it’s stuck. I find it a bit long-winded and all.

          • Noble Shift
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            510 days ago

            Or let simple medical issues become complicated medical issues because of fear of bankruptcy.

            • @[email protected]
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              210 days ago

              Yup. I had 2 medical procedures that would’ve set me back over $100,000 in the US. In Canada I was miffed that I had to pay for parking during the surgery.

              • Noble Shift
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                110 days ago

                Colombia for teeth, cheaper than home with good insurance.

      • the post of tom joad
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        610 days ago

        It’s a colloquialism of Internet denizens that I’ve seen floating around for many years. In fact it’s somewhat baffling to me that you haven’t seen it until now.

          • the post of tom joad
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            10 days ago

            Right, my bad. I guess I’m hinting at your comment needing a bit of a massage until it says what you mean. My suspicion is you actually just don’t like the turn of phrase, not that you don’t get why it’s used, right? Which is perfectly fine yo.

            Hell, the way you phrased not liking something as "not getting it’ and yor statement just now with the “?” At the end of it are both standard interwebby colloquialisms.

            Not fighting, just saying

            • @[email protected]
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              410 days ago

              Well like other people were saying, there’s a trend of people posting this prompt, and then others responding with funny answers. You’re right, I don’t like it when people use the same formulation in response to a comment. I also don’t get why people are doing it, for the same reason: I don’t think it’s funny, and it doesn’t really add anything to the conversation.

              Usually memes are funny because there’s a familiar pattern and then people riff on the pattern and make little unexpected tweaks. The type of usage I don’t like and don’t get is when people are just saying “you’re this” in a more wordy way. It has the form of a joke with no punchline.

              • the post of tom joad
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                210 days ago

                I get what you’re saying bout the repetitiveness of the way people communicate. Someone it can feel like a bunch of LLMs slapping together the same 10-15 lines together to mimic speech.

                I attemt to say things in different ways and have a “voice” you can hear to fight this repetitiveness, and out of sheer boredom towards the ways things are commonly said. THAT said I’m “guilty” of using memespeech too, and if course it can be clever shorthand to convey feeling if used properly.

                Dunno where I’m going with this but i do feel ya.

                • @Rekorse
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                  39 days ago

                  Personally I think this was a good use of the phrase. I was thinking it already when I read it. Good comment.

      • @[email protected]
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        410 days ago

        It may be coming from those popular AskReddit threads, such as: Tell me what you do for a living without telling what you do for a living.

      • @[email protected]
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        310 days ago

        Not calling you out specifically, but I see this phrase everywhere and don’t understand its popularity. It would be more concise and equally “clever” to just say “Sounds like this guy works in the US”. What is the appeal that everyone keeps typing this?

        Tell me you’re from the US without telling me you’re from the US.

      • Noxy
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        110 days ago

        Why did you type out “what is” when “what’s” is shorter and as clear?

        and did you really need that “just” in there?